Welcome to The Hill's Morning Report, and happy Tuesday! Our daily email gets you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch, co-created by Jonathan Easley and Alexis Simendinger. (CLICK HERE to subscribe!)

The Morning Report takes a break tomorrow on the Fourth of July, but returns on July 5. What better way to plan for fireworks than with this reminder …

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed…”

The White House successfully executed a full-court public relations push ahead of Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch’s confirmation last year.

Trump is taking this fight just as seriously, reshuffling West Wing personnel as the White House girds for battle and a hoped-for Senate confirmation in September. The court’s next term begins the first Monday in October.

The New York Times lists six federal appeals court judges believed to be under consideration: Thomas Hardiman, William Pryor Jr., Amul Thapar, Brett Kavanaugh, Joan Larsen and Amy Coney Barrett. Kavanaugh has been soaking up media attention, while Coney Barrett also enjoys support among conservatives.

The Hill: Schumer under heavy pressure from the left on Supreme Court.

The White House insists the president is not questioning potential nominees on the landmark 1973 ruling that upheld a constitutional, legal right to abortion.

“The president is pro-life but in terms of the process of selecting a Supreme Court nominee … He’s not going to discuss specific cases with those nominees.” — White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders.

“A judge sworn to decide impartially can offer no forecasts, no hints, for that would show not only disregard for the specifics of the particular case, it would display disdain for the entire judicial process.” — Ginsburg, 1993 Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing.

Will that logic hold up in 2018? Unlikely.

A new poll from Quinnipiac University released Monday finds 63 percent support for upholding Roe v. Wade.

Still, American views on abortion are more complex and evenly split. A Gallup survey from June found that 48 percent identify as “pro-life” and 48 percent as “pro-choice.” A majority, 53 percent, say abortion should be legal in only a few or no circumstances, versus 43 percent who said it should be legal in all or most circumstances.

"My hope is that we will be presented with a nominee that has a certain amount of humility and recognizes that it is not appropriate for the Supreme Court to overturn such a landmark decision." — Collins.

NBC News poll: Most want a vote on Supreme Court nominee before midterms.

LEADING THE DAY

POLITICS: Trump heads to White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., today to visit The Greenbrier resort, which is owned by his friend, Gov. Jim Justice (R), who memorably left the Democratic Party last year.

The Greenbrier will hold events honoring the military ahead of the July 4 holiday and the president will speak at a “Salute to Service” dinner.

That’s the question on everyone’s mind after Michael Cohensat for an interview with ABC News’sGeorge Stephanopoulos on Monday. Cohen, who once said he would “take a bullet for the president,” declared that his only allegiance is to “family and country.”

“My wife, my daughter and my son have my first loyalty and always will.” — Cohen.

That’s where the president could have exposure, including the payment Cohen arranged to keep adult-film actress Stormy Daniels from discussing her alleged affair with Trump.

But perhaps the most significant development here is that that Trump’s attorneys and Cohen’s new legal counsel, Guy Petrillo, are no longer working together (ABC News).

The two legal teams had been working together in an effort to block the federal government from reviewing documents they argued were protected by attorney-client privilege. The end of that arrangement indicates that Petrillo no longer sees a benefit in Cohen aligning with the president’s legal team.

“Short of a posting on eBay, Cohen could not be more clear in his pitch to Mueller. It was abundantly clear that he used this interview to remove any doubts as to his willingness to cooperate with Mueller.” — Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University law professor and contributor to The Hill.

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➔INTERNATIONAL: Eyes remain on Mexico, North Korea, Germany and Russia this week.

Mexico: The Hill: Mexico’s newly elected president, Andrės Manuel López Obrador, aspires to change his country’s tense relationship with the United States. Trump and López Obrador spoke for half an hour on Monday (USA Today). “I think the relationship will be a very good one,” Trump told reporters.

> Opinion: The Mexican president, known by his initials, AMLO, is something of a paradox (The New York Times).

Germany: In Berlin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her coalition partner, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, struck a deal on immigration on Monday. The standoff over migrant policy had threatened to unravel Merkel’s ruling coalition (The Wall Street Journal). In a stark turnaround, she agreed to build border camps for asylum-seekers and to tighten the border with Austria in a political deal to save her government (The New York Times).

Russia: What is the official U.S. policy when it comes to Russia’s annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014? The answer, once settled, is murkier now that Trump is preparing for a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin on July 16 in Finland. Trump sets U.S. policy, says national security adviser John Bolton, but the U.S. and Russia “agree to disagree” on Moscow’s annexation of Crimea, says White House spokeswoman Sanders. The U.S. does not recognize Crimea as part of Russia, and sanctions remain in place, she said on Monday (The Hill).

> The Kremlin insists Russia’s annexation of Crimea more than four years ago is not a topic for discussion during the upcoming Trump-Putin summit (The Hill). Putin is open to talking with Trump one-on-one with just translators, the Kremlin says (Reuters).

“Trump is coming with an agenda that Putin broadly supports. First, reiterating his call for Russia to rejoin the G-7. Second, saying that Crimea is old news and not something he wants to litigate. Third, questioning the utility of NATO, and some 35,000 American troops in Germany. And fourth, Trump hoping to end America's military presence in Syria.” — Ian Bremmer, president and founder of Eurasia Group

➔ADMINISTRATION & WHITE HOUSE: From immigration policy to the commerce secretary’s financial transactions, some new developments...

HHS – immigration: The Hill: The administration’s “zero tolerance” policy and the department’s role in caring for migrant children has created new pressures in an agency more accustomed to implementing U.S. health care and medical policies than the southern border. The Health and Human Services Department is in damage-control mode.

DHS – number of migrant arrests drop: This development, in particular, cheers the president, but the explanation for it remains unclear. U.S. Border Patrol arrests fell sharply in June to the lowest level since February, according to a U.S. official, ending a streak of four straight monthly increases. The drop may reflect seasonal migration trends or it could signal that the administration’s controversial "zero-tolerance" policy to criminally prosecute every adult who enters the country illegally is having a deterrent effect (The Associated Press).

Commerce Department – Ross’s stocks: As a Cabinet member, Ross concedes he executed stock sales and shorted shares in two more companies than previously reported, bringing the questionable transactions to five while serving in government with insider knowledge. The billionaire maintains that he executed all the trades to avoid any impression that his financial holdings represented a potential conflict of interest (CNBC). Not surprising: Ross’s financial actions are undergoing a lot of new scrutiny.

Lobbying to Trump on trade: “What will he see?” is a question Washington’s lobbyists are asking about the president while lobbying in opposition to his tariffs plans. Conventional methods of arguing clients’ perspectives to White House deciders now have an audience of one (Bloomberg).

Trump – communications: The Hill: “The other side of Trumpism” has now muted the president’s first-year yen for tweeting about gains in the stock market. A more volatile 2018 now makes for riskier West Wing messaging.

Trump – tweets and declassification: A federal judge rejected arguments on Monday that the president effectively confirmed the existence of a classified program when he used his Twitter account last July to counter particular newspaper coverage. The judge ruled that Trump’s statements were too ambiguous to waive the government’s right to withhold the information (Politico).

West Wing staff turnover and compensation: The Associated Press examined the annual White House staff list released publicly last weekend and calculated that the overall turnover has been in excess of 37 percent during the calendar year ending June 30 (it’s much higher among the top-tier assistants to the president). According to AP’s analysis from the most recent White House staff data, 141 staffers who worked for the president at that point last year are gone, with 138 new arrivals. AP also compared annual lists to identify key staff members who remain with the West Wing and have seen their salary rise since 2017.

OPINION

Making Puerto Rico a state by 2021, by Andrés L. Córdova, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2KEGbNZ

> On Sunday, Vermont became the ninth state to legalize recreational marijuana. Adults over age 21 are able to possess up to one ounce of marijuana, two mature marijuana plants and four immature plants (The Associated Press)

> Emergency room bills are ballooning with seemingly arbitrary and substantial “trauma response fees,” even if a patient suffered no trauma (Kaiser Health News and Vox). “A trauma fee is the price a trauma center charges when it activates and assembles a team of medical professionals that can meet a patient with potentially serious injuries in the ER. It is billed on top of the hospital’s emergency room physician charge and procedures, equipment and facility fees.”

And finally … Found alive but saved?Rescuers located 12 boys and their coach in Thailand after they became trapped more than a week ago in a partially flooded labyrinth of caves. British divers located the entire group on Monday, deep underground, but the news this morning is that teams of experts sent from multiple countries to the cave site are unsure how to help the group of boys to safety through now-flooded, dangerously narrow, pitch-black passageways (CNN).

It’s estimated that the boys are located about 1.2 miles into the cave and close to six-tenths of a mile below the surface. Authorities say they will begin supplying the trapped group with four months' worth of food and prepare to teach the boys how to use SCUBA equipment. But expecting the boys to navigate underwater is seen as a highly risky plan, especially if the boys are not experienced swimmers. (The rainy season ends there in four months.)

Experts in cave rescues at the site include a U.S. military team, an Australian group, British cave experts and Chinese emergency responders.

“These are challenging conditions and there’s a lot of consideration for safety. … The environment outside is contributing to the environment inside,” said U.S. Air Force Capt. Jessica Tait, part of a 30-member U.S. military team assisting in the search operation, referring to the rain that has been flooding the cave. “It’s challenging.” (The Associated Press)